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Must be the influence of her Jewish mother as Feminism is a Jewish movement against gentile culture. She is a Catholic/WOG mix -- who so mixed up she could not be a nationalist as she fits nowhere in Europe probably Ratajkowski is of Irish, German, Polish, and Polish-Jewish descent. Her father was raised Roman Catholic, her mother was raised Jewish. Heinz 57. You couldn't pay me to impregnant that WOG. Jews are not European you can't trust them they are shifty and shady.

The study is based on the 1972 American National Election Studies (ANES), the first wave in a three-wave study that subsequently continued in conjunction with the 1974 ANES and the 1976 ANES. 1,320 respondents completed all three waves of the panel. It was the interviewer who rated the respondents' physical attractiveness and the subjective assessment is somehow contaminated by other factors that are a part of the interview process, including respondents’ responses to the survey. The effect of attractiveness on ideology was only significant in the final wave of the panel (1976), where more attractive individuals were more likely to identify as Republicans. In 1972, Incumbent Republican President Richard Nixon defeated Democratic Senator George McGovern of South Dakota. Afterwards, Nixon lost much popular support, even from his own party, because of Watergate. But in 1976, Democrat Jimmy Carter of Georgia defeated incumbent Republican President Gerald Ford from Michigan, which may have energized the GOP base.

Having probed the effectiveness of the measure on social variables, we now turn to the
analysis of political variables. Our first political analysis seeks to test the role of physical
appearance in political worldview. For our purposes, we consider political worldview to be
primarily ideology and partisanship. Regressing partisanship and ideology on the measure of
attractiveness and control variables, results are shown in Table 3. Attractiveness does appear to
influence partisanship (but not ideology) in the expected direction. More attractive individuals
are more likely to identify as Republicans, rather than Democrats, as predicted by H1. This
effect holds across all three waves of the panel. Conversely, the effect of attractiveness on
ideology is only significant in the final wave of the panel, where more attractive individuals are
more likely to identify as conservatives. These results would seem to lend evidence to the socializing
experiences expected in our first hypothesis. We are cautious in making any great claims due to the
inchoate state of our theory of attractiveness.